Litcius/Paper detail

Longitudinal Changes in Cerebral Perfusion, Perivascular Space Volume, and Ventricular Volume in a Healthy Cohort Undergoing a Spaceflight Analog

Joe Tidwell, James A. Taylor, Heather Collins, Jordan Chamberlin, Giuseppe Barisano, Farshid Sepehrband, Matthew D Turner, G Gauthier, Edwin Mulder, Darius A. Gerlach, Donna R. Roberts

2023American Journal of Neuroradiology16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

<h3>BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:</h3> A global decrease in brain perfusion has recently been reported during exposure to a ground-based spaceflight analog. Considering that CSF and glymphatic flow are hypothesized to be propelled by arterial pulsations, it is unknown whether a change in perfusion would impact these CSF compartments. The aim of the current study was to evaluate the relationship among changes in cerebral perfusion, ventricular volume, and perivascular space volume before, during, and after a spaceflight analog. <h3>MATERIALS AND METHODS:</h3> Eleven healthy participants underwent 30 days of bed rest at 6° head-down tilt with 0.5% atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> as a spaceflight analog. For each participant, 6 MR imaging brain scans, including perfusion and anatomic-weighted T1 sequences, were obtained before, during, and after the analog period. Global perfusion, ventricular volume, and perivascular space volume time courses were constructed and evaluated with repeated measures ANOVAs. <h3>RESULTS:</h3> Global perfusion followed a divergent time trajectory from ventricular and perivascular space volume, with perfusion decreasing during the analog, whereas ventricular and perivascular space volume increased (<i>P </i>&lt; .001). These patterns subsequently reversed during the 2-week recovery period. <h3>CONCLUSIONS:</h3> The patterns of change in brain physiology observed in healthy participants suggest a relationship between cerebral perfusion and CSF homeostasis. Further study is warranted to determine whether a causal relationship exists and whether similar neurophysiologic responses occur during spaceflight.

Topics & Concepts

SpaceflightPerfusionMedicineCerebral perfusion pressureCardiologyPerivascular spaceInternal medicinePerfusion scanningAnesthesiaNuclear medicinePathologyEngineeringAerospace engineeringCerebrospinal fluid and hydrocephalusSpaceflight effects on biologyOlder Adults Driving Studies